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Allowing APPs to sign anti-cancer treatment orders not only improves access to high-quality cancer care, it can also free up physician time to see more new patients and streamline clinic workflow.
![Remote Patient Monitoring of Patients on CAR T-Cell Therapy — [PODCAST] EP 95](https://cdn.sanity.io/images/0vv8moc6/accc-cancer/e52f62d96de86fa1b1ad05b759bede599c0b88fd-508x508.png?fit=crop&auto=format)
Find the CANCER BUZZ podcast on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts!
While remote monitoring platforms have been used effectively throughout the COVID-19 pandemic to reduce the burden on patients and healthcare facilities around the country, Vanderbilt Ingram Cancer Center in Nashville, Tenn., has been using the technology in a different capacity—with its chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cell therapy patients. Today, these patients are monitored 24/7 via remote technology, alerting cancer program staff of any significant changes in clinical status that would initiate a hospital admission.
Read more in "Changing the Tune for CAR T-Cell Therapy: A Music City Experience in Remote Patient Monitoring," in the Volume 38, Number 6 Oncology Issues.
Guest:


Brittney M. Baer, BSN, RN
Patient Care Coordinator
Vanderbilt University Medical Center
“One of the biggest challenges is access to care for CAR T-cell therapy patients...it’s a struggle for them [patients] to get to these larger academic medical centers and that’s a burden on patients…so, it’s very, very cool and our patients seem to really enjoy it because they don’t have to spend nearly as much time at the hospital.”
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